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<journal-meta>
<journal-id>1806-6445</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Sur - Revista Internacional de Direitos Humanos]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Sur]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>1806-6445</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Sur - Rede Universitária de Direitos Humanos]]></publisher-name>
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<article-meta>
<article-id>S1806-64452006000100003</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Social, economic and cultural rights and civil and political rights]]></article-title>
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<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Piovesan]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Flavia]]></given-names>
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<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Carvalho]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Regina de Barros]]></given-names>
</name>
</contrib>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Morris]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Jonathan]]></given-names>
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<institution><![CDATA[,  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
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<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2006</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2006</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>1</volume>
<numero>se</numero>
<fpage>0</fpage>
<lpage>0</lpage>
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<self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S1806-64452006000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S1806-64452006000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S1806-64452006000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This essay deals with social, economic and cultural rights and political and civil rights within the context of international law on human rights. To this end, it reviews the contemporary conception of this issue in the light of the international system of protection, evaluating its profile, its objectives, its logic and its principles, and questioning the feasibility of an integrated vision of human rights. This is followed by an evaluation of the main challenges and prospects for the implementation of these rights, claiming that facing this challenge is essential to ensure that human rights will take on their central role in the contemporary order.]]></p></abstract>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p><font face="Verdana" size="4"><b>Social, economic and cultural rights and civil    and political rights*</b></font></p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>Flavia Piovesan</b></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Lecturer of Constitutional Law and Human Rights    at the Catholic University of São Paulo (PUC-SP), and at the Catholic University    of Paraná</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Translated by Regina de Barros Carvalho and Jonathan    Morris    <br>   Translation from <b>Sur - Revista Internacional de Direitos Humanos</b>, S&atilde;o    Paulo, n.1, p.21-48, 2004.</font></p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>  <hr size="1"noshade>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>ABSTRACT</b></font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">This essay deals with social, economic and cultural    rights and political and civil rights within the context of international law    on human rights. To this end, it reviews the contemporary conception of this    issue in the light of the international system of protection, evaluating its    profile, its objectives, its logic and its principles, and questioning the feasibility    of an integrated vision of human rights. This is followed by an evaluation of    the main challenges and prospects for the implementation of these rights, claiming    that facing this challenge is essential to ensure that human rights will take    on their central role in the contemporary order.</font></p>  <hr size="1"noshade>     <p>&nbsp;</p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="3"><b>How to understand the contemporary formulation    of human rights</b></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Human rights come into being as and when they    are able and required to do so. As Norberto Bobbio emphasizes, human rights    do not arise either all at once or for good. To Hannah Arendt, human rights    are not given facts, but a construct, a human invention that is subject to an    ongoing process of construction and reconstruction.<a name="sup01"></a><a href="#end01"><SUP>1</SUP></a>    Considering the historicity of these rights, it may be said that the definition    of human rights will point to a plurality of meanings. Considering this plurality,    the so-called contemporary conception of human rights is a distinctive one,    introduced through the Universal Declaration of 1948, and restated in the Vienna    Declaration of Human Rights of 1993.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">This conception is the result of a movement towards    the internationalization of human rights, an extremely recent phenomenon that    emerged after World War II as a response to the atrocities and horrors committed    during the Nazi regime. Presenting the State as the major violator of human    rights, the Hitler Era was characterized by a logic of destruction and expendability    of human beings that resulted in the confinement of 18 million individuals in    concentration camps, and the death of 11 million, including 6 million Jews,    as well as Communists, homosexuals and Gypsies, etc. The legacy of Nazism made    entitlement to rights, that is, the condition of qualifying for rights, contingent    on membership of a given race: the pure Aryan race. In the words of Ignacy Sachs    (1998, p. 149), the 20th Century was marked by two world wars and the absolute    horror of genocide formulated as a political and industrial project.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">It was in this context that the attempt to reconstruct    human rights was formulated as an ethical paradigm and benchmark to guide the    contemporary international order. If World War II stood for a breach with human    rights, the post-war period had to stand for their reconstruction. The approval    of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 1948 was the major    landmark in the reconstruction of human rights. This declaration introduces    the contemporary conception of human rights, characterized by their universality    and indivisibility: universality insofar as it calls for the universal extension    of human rights in the belief that being human is the sole criterion for entitlement    to rights, and considering human beings as essentially moral beings that have    an existential uniqueness and dignity; indivisibility, since the guarantee of    political and civil rights is a pre-condition for the observance of social,    economic and cultural rights, and vice-versa. When one of these conditions is    violated, so are all the others. Human rights thus comprise an indivisible,    interdependent and inter-related unity that is capable of associating the list    of civil and political rights to the list of social, economic and cultural rights.    In this manner, it enshrines an integrated concept of human rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Examining the indivisibility and interdependence    of human rights, Hector Gros Espiell (1986, pp. 16-17) notes that: </font></p>      <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>Only the full recognition of all of these      rights can guarantee the real existence of any one of them, since without      the effective enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights, civil and      political rights are reduced to merely formal categories. Conversely, without      the reality of civil and political rights, without effective liberty understood      in its broadest sense, economic, social and cultural rights in turn lack any      real significance. This idea of the necessary integrality, interdependence      and indivisibility regarding the concept and the reality of the content of      human rights that is, in a certain sense, implicit in the Charter of the United      Nations, was compiled, expanded and systematized in the 1948 Universal Declaration      of Human Rights, definitively reaffirmed in the Universal Covenants on Human      Rights approved by the General Assembly in 1966, and in force since 1976,      as well as in the Proclamation of Teheran of 1968, and the Resolution of the      General Assembly, adopted on December 16, 1977, on the criteria and means      for improving the effective enjoyment of fundamental rights and liberties      (Resolution n. 32/130).</i></font></p>  </blockquote>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">As the major landmark in the movement towards    the internationalization of human rights, the Universal Declaration of 1948    promoted the conversion of these rights into an issue of legitimate interest    to the international community. As Kathryn Sikkink (p. 413) observes: "International    human rights law assumes that it is legitimate and necessary for governmental    and non-governmental actors to be concerned with the way in which the inhabitants    of other states are treated. The safety net of international human rights aims    to redefine what is exclusively within the domestic jurisdiction of individual    states."<a name="sup02"></a><a href="#end02"><SUP>2</SUP></a></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In this way, the idea that the protection of    human rights should not be the exclusive responsibility of the state is strengthened,    i.e. it should not be restricted to the national authority or to a domestic    jurisdiction, since it evolves an issue of legitimate international interest.    In turn, this innovative concept points to two important consequences: (1) The    revision of the traditional concept of the absolute sovereignty of the state,    which has become a more relative notion, to the degree that international intervention    in national affairs is permitted in the cause of protecting human rights; i.e.    there has been a shift from a "hobbesian" conception of sovereignty centered    on the state to a "kantian" notion of sovereignty centered on universal citizenship.<a name="sup03"></a><a href="#end03"><SUP>3</SUP></a>    (2) The crystallization of the idea that individuals should enjoy the protection    of their rights at international level, as a subject of the law.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">These measures thus predict the end of an era    in which the state’s form of treating its citizens was conceived as a problem    of domestic jurisdiction, derived from its own sovereignty.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The process of universalizing human rights permitted,    in turn, the formation of a normative international system for protecting these    rights. According to André Gonçalves Pereira &amp; Fausto de Quadros (p. 661)    "in terms of political science, it was merely a question of transposing and    adapting to international law the evolution that had already taken place in    domestic law at the start of the century, from the police state to the welfare    state. It was nevertheless sufficient for international law to abandon its classical    phase, in the form of the law of peace and war, to move on to the new or modern    era in its evolution, in the form of an international law of cooperation and    solidarity".<a name="sup04"></a><a href="#end04"><SUP>4</SUP></a></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Starting with the Universal Declaration of 1948    and the contemporary conception of human rights that it introduced, International    Human Rights Law began to develop through the adoption of many international    treaties that aimed to protect fundamental rights. The 1948 Declaration provides    axiological support and a unity of values for this area of the law, with an    emphasis on the universality, indivisibility and interdependence of human rights.    As Norberto Bobbio (p. 30) states, human rights arise as universal natural rights,    develop as private positive rights (when every constitution incorporates declarations    of rights) and are finally realized in full as universal positive rights. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The process of universalization of human rights    has allowed the formation of an international system for protecting these rights.    This system has been set up by international protection treaties that above    all, reflect a contemporary ethical conscience that is shared among states,    to the degree that these invoke the international consensus on minimum protective    parameters with regard to human rights (the "irreducible ethical minimum").    In this sense, it should be emphasized that as of August 2002 (See Human Development    Report, UNDP), the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights had    148 signatory countries, while the International Covenant on Economic, Social,    and Cultural Rights had 145 signatory countries, the Convention against Torture    had 130, the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination had 162,    the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women had 170, and    the Convention on the Rights of the Child had the widest membership, with 191    signatory countries. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Side by side with this global normative system,    regional systems of protection have emerged that aim to internationalize human    rights at regional level, particularly in Europe, the Americas and Africa. There    is also an incipient Arab system and a proposal for the creation of a regional    system in Asia. These developments will consolidate the coexistence of the UN’s    global system with instruments of a regional system that are in turn integrated    by the American, European and African systems of protection for human rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The global and regional systems are therefore    not divergent, but complementary. Inspired by the values and principles of the    Universal Declaration, they comprise a range of instruments for protecting human    rights at international level. From this point of view, the various systems    for the protection of human rights interact on behalf of protected individuals.    The proposal for the coexistence of distinct legal instruments that guarantee    the same rights is thus consistent with the expansion and strengthening of the    protection of these rights. The crucial issue is the degree of efficiency of    the protection afforded, for which reason, in real life cases, the rule to be    applied is that which ensures the victim the best protection. In adopting the    value of the primacy of the individual, these systems complement each other,    interacting with the national protection system in order to provide the greatest    possible effectiveness in protecting and promoting fundamental rights. This    is also the logic and the underlying set of principles of International Law    of Human Rights itself, which is entirely founded on the supreme principle of    human dignity.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The contemporary conception of human rights is    characterized by the universalization and internationalization of these rights,    which are conceived of as indivisible.<a name="sup05"></a><a href="#end05"><SUP>5</SUP></a>    It should be noted that the Vienna Declaration of Human Rights, of 1993, reiterates    the formulation of the 1948 Declaration, when it affirms in its 5th paragraph    that: "All human rights are universal, interdependent and inter-related. The    international community should treat human rights globally in a just and equitable    way, on an equal basis and with the same emphasis".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In this way, the Vienna Declaration of 1993,    signed by 171 states, endorses the universality and indivisibility of human    rights, reinvigorating the legitimacy of the so-called contemporary conception    of human rights introduced by the 1948 Declaration. It should be noted that    as the "post-war" Consensus, the 1948 Declaration was adopted by 48 states,    with 8 abstentions. The Vienna Declaration of 1993 extends, renews and expands    the consensus on the universality and indivisibility of human rights, at the    same time as it affirms the interdependence between the values of human rights,    democracy and development.</font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">There can be no human rights without democracy,    nor democracy without human rights. In other words, the regime that is most    compatible with the protection of human rights is the democratic regime. At    the present time, 140 states, of the almost 200 states that are part of the    international order, hold regular elections. At the same time, only 82 states    (representing 57% of the world’s population) are considered to be fully democratic.    In 1985, this proportion stood at 38%, comprising 44 States.<a name="sup06"></a><a href="#end06"><SUP>6</SUP></a>    The full exercise of political rights may imply the "empowerment" of more vulnerable    populations as well as an increase in their capacity for lobbying, political    coordination and mobilization. Amartya Sen (2003) considers that political rights    (including freedom of expression and debate) are not only fundamental for demanding    political responses to economic needs, but are central to the very formulation    of these economic needs.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In addition, given the indivisibility of human    rights, we must abandon for good the erroneous notion that one class of rights    (civil and political rights) require full recognition and respect, while another    class (social, economic and cultural rights) does not require observance of    any kind. From an international normative perspective, the notion that social,    economic and cultural rights are not legal rights has been superseded for good.    The idea that social rights are non-actionable is purely ideological and not    scientific; they stand out as authentic and genuine fundamental rights that    are actionable, demandable and that require serious and responsible observance.    For this reason, they should be demanded as rights, and not as gestures of charity,    generosity or compassion.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">As Asbjorn Eide &amp; Allan Rosas (pp. 17-18)    note: "Taking economic, social and cultural rights seriously implies a simultaneous    commitment to social integration, solidarity and equality, including the issue    of income distribution. Social, economic and cultural rights include protection    for vulnerable groups as a central concern. ... Fundamental needs must not be    made contingent on charity from state programs and policies, but must be defined    as rights". </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">An understanding of economic, social and cultural    rights also demands recourse to the right to development. In order to reveal    the reach of the right to development, it is important to highlight, as Celso    Lafer (1999) does, that in the field of values, the consequence for human rights    of an international system of defined polarities – East/West, North/South –    has been an ideological battle between civil and political rights (the liberal    heritage sponsored by the USA) and economic, social and cultural rights (the    social heritage sponsored by the former Soviet Union). It was in this context    that "an effort by the Third World to elaborate its own cultural identity, proposing    collective rights of cultural identity, such as the right to development", emerged. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In this sense, the UN adopted the Declaration    of the Right to Development in 1986, with 146 states voting in favor, 1 against    (USA) and 8 abstaining. For Allan Rosas (1995, pp. 254-255): "With regard to    the content of the right to development, three aspects deserve mention: firstly,    the 1986 Declaration endorses the importance of participation. ... Secondly,    the Declaration should be conceived in the context of the basic needs of social    justice. ... Thirdly, the Declaration emphasizes both the need to adopt national    programs and policies and international cooperation ...". The 2nd article of    the Declaration of the Right to Development of 1986 enshrines the principle    that: "Human beings are the central subject of development and should be active    participants in and the beneficiaries of this right". The 4th article of the    Declaration adds that states have a duty to adopt measures, whether individually    or collectively, that aim to formulate international development policies, with    a view to facilitating the full realization of rights, adding that effective    international cooperation is essential for providing developing countries with    the means to encourage the right to development.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The right to development demands a form of globalization    that is both ethical and sympathetic. In the understanding of Mohammed Bedjaoui    (p. 182): "In reality, the international dimension of the right to development    is nothing more than an equitable distribution with regard to global social    and economic well being. This reflects a crucial question of our age, in so    far as four fifths of the world’s population no longer accept the fact that    a fifth of the world’s population continues to build its wealth on the basis    of the remainder’s poverty". Global asymmetries reveal that the income of the    richest 1% exceeds the income of the poorest 57% (UNDP, p. 19). </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">As Joseph E. Stiglitz (p. 6) points out: "The    actual number of people living in poverty has actually increased by almost 100    million. This has occurred at the same time that total world income increased    by an average of 2.5% percent annually".<a name="sup07"></a><a href="#end07"><SUP>7</SUP></a>    For the World Health Organization: "poverty is the world’s greatest killer.    Poverty wields its destructive influence at every stage of human life, from    the moment of conception to the grave. It conspires with the most deadly and    painful diseases to bring a wretched existence to all those who suffer from    it" (Farmer, p. 50).<a name="sup08"></a><a href="#end08"><SUP>8</SUP></a></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">To adopt Amartya Sen’s conception, development    must in turn be imagined as a process of expanding real liberties that individuals    can make use of.<a name="sup09"></a><a href="#end09"><SUP>9</SUP></a> One may    also add that the Vienna Declaration of 1993 emphasizes that the right to development    is a universal and inalienable right that forms an integral part of fundamental    human rights. We would reiterate that the Vienna Declaration recognizes the    interdependence between democracy, development and human rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">We thus move to the final reflection.</font></p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="3"><b>What are the challenges and prospects for    the implementation of human rights within the contemporary order?</b></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">This question entails six challenges:</font></p>      <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><i>1. Consolidating and strengthening the      process of affirming the integral and indivisible vision of human rights,      through the conjugation of civil and political rights with economic, social      and cultural rights</i></b></font></p>  </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Human rights as an "acquired set of values" are    undergoing constant elaboration and redefinition.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">If, traditionally, the human rights agenda focused    on the protection of civil and political rights, under the heavy impact of the    "voice of the North", we are currently witnessing the expansion of this traditional    agenda, which is incorporating new rights, with an emphasis on economic, social    and cultural rights, the right to development, the right to social inclusion,    and on poverty as a violation of rights. This process has allowed an echo for    "the South’s own voice" that is capable of revealing the concerns, demands and    priorities of this region.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">These are necessary advances in the continuous    expansion of the conceptual reach of human rights that contemplate the basic    needs of social justice. In such a context, it is fundamental to consolidate    and strengthen the process of affirming human rights from this integral, indivisible    and interdependent perspective. </font></p>      <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><i>2. Incorporating gender, race and ethnicity      approaches in the conception of human rights, as well as creating specific      policies to protect socially vulnerable groups</i></b></font></p>  </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The effective protection of human rights demands    not only universalistic policies, but also specific, those that target socially    vulnerable groups, as the major victims of exclusion. In other words, the implementation    of human rights demands the universality and indivisibility of these rights    as well as the respect for diversity.</font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">To the process of expanding human rights, we    may add the process of specifying the subjects of these rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The first phase of protection of human rights    was characterized by a general protection, which expressed a fear of difference    (which under Nazism had been directed towards extermination), based on formal    equality. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">It has nevertheless proven insufficient to treat    individuals in a generic, general and abstract form, rendering it necessary    to specify the subjects of law, which must be seen in all of their peculiarity    and singularity. From this point of view, certain subjects of law, or certain    violations of law, require a specific and differentiated response. From this    perspective, among other vulnerable categories, women, children, populations    of African descent, migrants and physically disadvantaged individuals must be    seen in terms of the specificities and peculiarities of their social condition.    Together with the right to equality, the right to difference also arises as    a fundamental right. Respect for difference and diversity, guaranteeing these    special treatment, are equally important.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">According to Paul Farmer (p. 212), "The concept    of human rights may at times be brandished as an all-purpose and universal tonic,    but it was developed to protect the vulnerable. The true value of the human    rights movement’s central documents is revealed only when they serve to protect    the rights of those who are most likely to have their rights violated. The proper    beneficiaries of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights ... are the poor    and otherwise disempowered".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">For Nancy Fraser (pp. 55-56), justice simultaneously    demands redistribution and the recognition of identities. "Recognition cannot    be reduced to distribution, since social status is not simply a function of    class. Let us take the example of an African-American banker on Wall Street    who cannot find a taxi. In this case, the injustice of a lack of recognition    has little to do with poor distribution. ... Conversely, distribution cannot    be reduced to recognition, since access to resources does not merely derive    from status. We may consider the example of a specialized industrial worker    who becomes unemployed due to the closure of the factory in which he or she    works as the result of a speculative corporate merger. In this case, the injustice    of poor distribution has little to do with the lack of recognition". Justice    has thus a two-dimensional character: redistribution plus recognition. In the    same sense, Boaventura de Souza Santos (2003, pp. 56 and 429-461) states that    only a demand for recognition and redistribution permits the realization of    equality.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Boaventura (p. 458) adds that: "we have the right    to be equal when our difference makes us inferior; and we have the right to    be different when our equality jeopardizes our identity. This entails the need    for an equality that acknowledges differences and a difference that does not    produce, promote or reproduce inequalities".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">If we consider the processes of "feminization"    and "ethnicization" of poverty, we perceive that, in Brazil, the main victims    of the violation of economic, social and cultural rights are women and populations    of African descent (on this subject, see Flavia Piovesan &amp; Silvia Pimentel).    This entails the need to adopt, in tandem with universalist policies, specific    policies that are capable of providing visibility to individuals that are more    vulnerable and that allow these to exercise their right to social inclusion    in full.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">We should also add the democratic component in    order to guide the formulation of such public policies; i.e. there is a need    to ensure the right to effective participation of social groups in the formulation    of policies that affect them directly. Civil society is clamoring for greater    transparency and democratic accountability in the management of public sector    budgets and the construction and implementation of public policies.</font></p>      <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><i>3. Optimizing the justiciability and      enforceability of economic, social and cultural rights</i></b></font></p>  </blockquote>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">As the Vienna Declaration of 1993 recommended,    it is fundamental to adopt measures to ensure greater justiciability and enforceability    for economic, social and cultural rights, such as the elaboration of a Facultative    Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights    (which introduces the system of individual petitions), as well as of technical/scientific    indicators capable of measuring the advances in the implementation of these    rights. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Within the global system, the International Covenant    on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights merely considers the mechanism for    states to submit reports, as a way of monitoring the rights that it expresses.    Already within the interamerican system, there are plans for a system of petitions    to the Interamerican Commission on Human Rights to denounce violations of the    right to education and union rights, expressed in the San Salvador Protocol.    In addition to introducing a system for lobbying at global level, through the    adoption of the Facultative Protocol, it is also essential to optimize the use    of this regional mechanism, in whatever form the right of petition takes, in    order to protect rights to education and union rights. In addition, there is    a need to extend the ability to bring actions in defense of other economic,    social and cultural rights, such as the violation of civil rights as an "entry    door" for demands deriving from economic, social and cultural rights. By way    of illustration, the following cases deserve highlighting: (a) the provision    of drugs to carriers of the HIV virus (on the basis of the violation of the    4th article of the American Convention – right to life); and (b) summary dismissal    of workers (on the basis of the violation of due legal process – Baena Ricardo    vs. Panama).</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The potential of international litigation in    securing internal advances in the regime of protecting human rights is obvious.    This is the most important contribution that the use of the international system    of protection can offer: promoting progress and internal advances in the protection    of human rights within a given state. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The incorporation of the system of individual    petitions is also the result of a process of recognition of new actors among    the international players, with the consequent democratization of international    instruments. If, over the course of a long period, states have been the central    protagonists of the international order, today we are experiencing the emergence    of new international actors, such as international organizations, regional economic    blocs, individuals and international civil society. The strengthening of international    civil society through a network that promotes communication between local, regional    and global entities,<a name="sup10"></a><a href="#end10"><SUP>10</SUP></a> as    well as the consolidation of the individual as the subject of international    law, demand the democratization of international instruments, as well as access    to international mechanisms and international justice itself.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The emergence of new international actors requires    the democratization of the international system for the protection of human    rights. An example of this is Protocol n. 11 of the European regional system,    which has allowed direct access by individuals to the European Court of Human    Rights. To this may be added the recent approval of the 1999 Facultative Protocol    to the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, which    incorporates the system of individual petition. Also worthy of mention is the    Facultative Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and    Cultural Rights, which introduces the right of individual petition in the same    way.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Having said this, it should be pointed out that    one finds a marked resistance by many states to accept the democratization of    the international system of protection of human rights, especially with regard    to the system of individual petitions.<a name="sup11"></a><a href="#end11"><SUP>11</SUP></a>    This system crystallizes the capacity of the individual to bring actions at    international level, "constituting" according to Antônio Augusto Cançado Trindade    (p. 8), "a protection mechanism of notable significance, as well as a conquest    of historic proportions". </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">It is also fundamental to ensure that treaties    protecting economic, social and cultural rights can depend on an effective system    of monitoring that includes reports, individual petitions, and communications    between states. It is important to add the system of <i>in loco</i> investigations,    which are only considered in the Convention against Torture and the Facultative    Protocol to the CEDAW. From this point of view, it is fundamental to encourage    states to accept these mechanisms, as it is no longer admissible that states    accept rights but renege on their guarantees of protection.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In addition to these mechanisms, it is crucial    to promote the elaboration of technical/scientific indicators to evaluate the    implementation and observance of economic, social and cultural rights,    particularly with regard to their necessary advancement and the prevention of    social regression.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Another strategy is to promote visits by special    UN and OAS investigators regarding issues related to economic, social and cultural    rights. Thematic reports represent an effective way of catalyzing attention    and providing visibility of given violations of human rights, as well as of    making recommendations. More than symbolizing an appraisal of the human rights    situation in a given country, the greatest contribution that such investigators    can make in drawing up reports is the use of these reports as instruments for    securing internal advances in the regime that protects human rights in the country    in question. On this point, we may observe the positive impact on Brazil of    the visit by the UN investigator of torture in 2000. To this, we may add the    impact of the visit to Brazil in 2002 of the investigator into food rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">We may also highlight the unprecedented experience    in Brazil of adopting thematic reports on economic, social and cultural rights,    inspired by the UN investigations on the following issues: (a) health; (b) housing;    (c) education; (d) food; (e) work and (f) the environment. As in the UN system,    the proposal is that such investigations appraise the situation of these rights    and highlight recommendations for ensuring the full exercise of the same. </font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In short, efforts are necessary to optimize the    justiciability and enforceability of economic, social and cultural rights, so    as to strengthen the implementation of the right to social inclusion.</font></p>      <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><i>4. Incorporating the social human rights      agenda into the agenda of international financial institutions, regional economic      organizations and of the private sector </i></b></font></p>  </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In order to meet the challenges of implementing    human rights, it is not sufficient merely to concentrate on the state. The Declaration    on the Right to Development and the International Covenant on Economic, Social,    and Cultural Rights themselves emphasize both the need to adopt national programs    and policies and for international cooperation. The 4th article of the Declaration    highlights the fact that effective international cooperation is essential for    providing developing countries with the means to promote the right to development.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Within the context of economic globalization,    there is a pressing need for non-governmental agents to incorporate human rights    into their agendas. Three fundamental types of actor have emerged: (a) international    financial agencies, (b) regional economic groupings and (c) the private sector.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">With regard to the international financial agencies,    there is the challenge of ensuring that human rights permeate macroeconomic    policy in such a way as to involve fiscal, monetary and exchange rate policies.    International economic institutions should focus their attention on the human    dimension of their activities, and the heavy impact that their policies can    have on local economies, especially in an increasingly globalized world (Cf.    Mary Robinson).<a name="sup12"></a><a href="#end12"><SUP>12</SUP></a></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">While the international financial agencies are    linked to the United Nations system as specialized agencies, the World Bank    and the International Monetary Fund, for instance, have so far failed to formulate    a specific human rights policy. Such a policy is an imperative for achieving    the propositions of the UN, and above all, for achieving the coherent ethics    and set of principles that are required to guide their activity. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">There is a need to supersede the paradoxes arising    from the conflict between the inclusion principle that aims to promote human    rights and that is enshrined in the relevant UN treaties that protect human    rights (notably the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural    Rights), and the exclusion effects of the actions dictated particularly by the    International Monetary Fund, in so far as its policy, within the framework of    the so-called "conditionality" clauses, in actual fact submits developing countries    to structural adjustment models that are incompatible with human rights.<a name="sup13"></a><a href="#end13"><SUP>13</SUP></a>    In addition, there is a need to strengthen democratization, transparency and    accountability of these institutions.<a name="sup14"></a><a href="#end14"><SUP>14</SUP></a>    It may be noted that 48% of the IMF’s voting rights are concentrated in the    hands of 7 states (US, Japan, France, UK, Saudi Arabia, China and Russia), while    at the World Bank, 46% of the voting rights are concentrated in the hands of    the same states (see Human Development Report 2002). In the critical view of    Joseph E. Stiglitz (pp. 21-22): "... we have a system that might be called global    governance without global government, one in which a few institutions – the    World Bank, the IMF, the WTO – and a few players – the finance, commerce, and    trade ministries, closely linked to certain financial and commercial interests    – dominate the scene, but in which many of those affected by their decisions    are left almost voiceless. It’s time to change some of the rules governing the    international economic order ...".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">With regard to the regional economic groupings,    one will here also encounter the paradoxes that arise from the tensions between    the exclusive character of the process of economic globalization and the movements    that attempt to reinforce democracy and human rights as parameters which provide    an ethical and moral backing to the creation of a new international order. On    the side, stands the exclusion process of economic globalization; and on the    other, one is witness to the emergence of the inclusive process of internationalization    of human rights, in addition to the process of incorporation of democratic clauses    and human rights by regional economic groupings. While the formation of economic    groupings with a regional reach, such as the European Union and Mercosur, has    attempted to promote not only economic integration and cooperation, but also,    subsequently and gradually, the consolidation of democracy and the implementation    of human rights in the respective regions (which is more evident in the European    Union, but still only incipient in Mercosur), it will be observed that democratic    and human rights clauses have not been incorporated into the agenda of the economic    globalization process.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">With regard to the private sector, there is also    a need to emphasize its social responsibility, especially within multinational    companies, in so far as these constitute the major beneficiaries of the globalization    process, it being sufficient to cite the fact that of the 100 largest economies    in the world, 51 are multinational companies and 49 are national states. It    is important, for example, to encourage companies to adopt codes of human rights    with regard to their commercial activity; and to impose commercial sanctions    on companies that violate social rights, adopting the "Tobin tax" on international    financial investments, as well as imposing other measures.</font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><i>5. Strengthening the responsibility of      the state in the implementation of economic, social and cultural rights, as      well as the right to social inclusion, and poverty as a violation of human      rights </i> </b></font></p>  </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Given the serious risks of dismantling the public    sector social policies, there is a need to redefine the role of the state in    order to take account of the impact of economic globalization. There is a need    to strengthen the responsibility of the state with regard to the implementation    of economic, social and cultural rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">As Asbjorn Eide (p. 383) warns: "Paths can and    must be found that enable the state to ensure that it guarantees respect and    protection for economic, social and cultural rights, so as to preserve the conditions    for a relatively free market economy. Government action must promote social    equality, confront social inequalities, compensate the imbalances created by    markets and guarantee sustainable human development. Governments and markets    must complement each other".<a name="sup15"></a><a href="#end15"><SUP>15</SUP></a>    </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In the same sense, Jack Donnelly (1998, p. 160)    points out that: "Free markets are analogous in economic terms to political    systems based on majority rule, without, however, observing the rights of minorities.    From this point of view, social policies are essential for ensuring that minorities,    which are deprived or disadvantaged by the market, receive a minimum level of    respect in the economic sphere. ... Markets seek efficiency and not social justice    or human rights for all".<a name="sup16"></a><a href="#end16"><SUP>16</SUP></a>    </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">We may also add that the enforcement of economic,    social and cultural rights is not only a moral obligation of states, but also    a legal obligation, based on international treaties that protect human rights,    particularly the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights.    States have thus a duty to respect, protect and implement the economic, social    and cultural rights determined in the Covenant. The same Covenant, which currently    has 145 signatory countries, establishes an extensive catalog of rights, including    the right to work and just wages, the right to form and join unions, the right    to an adequate standard of living, the right to housing, the right to education,    to social security, to health, etc. In the terms established in the Covenant,    these rights are to be realized progressively, being dependent on the actions    of the state, which must adopt all measures, to the extent of its available    resources,<a name="sup17"></a><a href="#end17"><SUP>17</SUP></a> with a view    to the progressive realization in full of these rights (Article 2, Paragraph    1 of the Covenant).<a name="sup18"></a><a href="#end18"><SUP>18</SUP></a> As    David Trubek affirms: "Social rights as social welfare rights imply a view according    to which the government has the obligation of guaranteeing such conditions for    all individuals in an adequate manner".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Here again it should be stressed that, due to    the indivisibility of human rights, the violation of economic, social and cultural    rights entails the violation of civil and political rights, which explains why    economic and social vulnerability leads to the vulnerability of civil and political    rights. In the words of Amartya Sen (1999, p. 8): "The negation of economic    liberty, in the form of extreme poverty, makes individuals vulnerable to violations    of other forms of liberty. ... The negation of economic liberty implies the    negation of social and political liberty". </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">If civil and political rights maintain governments    within reasonable democratic limits, economic and social rights establish adequate    limits for the markets. Markets and elections are not sufficient in themselves    to ensure human rights for all (Donnelly, 1998, p. 160).</font></p>      <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><i>6. Strengthening the State of Law and      the construction of peace in global/regional/local spheres, through a culture      of human rights </i></b> </font></p>  </blockquote>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Finally, it should be emphasized that in a post-September    11 and post-Iraq War context, the challenge has emerged of sustaining the efforts    to build a "state of international law" in an arena that is promoting an international    "police state", fundamentally guided by the principle of international force    and security. The risk is that the fight against terror will jeopardize the    civilizing function of rights, liberties and guarantees, given the clamor for    maximum security. It is enough to note the new security doctrine adopted by    the USA based on: (a) unilateralism; (b) preventive strikes and (c) the hegemony    of US military power. We may observe the nefarious consequences for the international    order if each one of the almost two hundred states were to invoke for itself    the right to carry out "preventive strikes" on the basis of unilateralism. This    would be tantamount to the demise of International Law, ressurecting the hobbesian    "state of nature" in its very essence, in which war is the dominant expression,    and peace is limited to be the absence of war.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The pretext of waging war on the so-called "empire    of evil" has above all promoted the "evil of empire". Surveys demonstrate the    perverse impact of the post-September 11 era in the formation of a global agenda    that tends to impose restrictions on rights and liberties. By way of example,    we may cite the survey published by <i>The Economist</i><a name="sup19"></a><a href="#end19"><SUP>19</SUP></a>    on legislation approved in a number of countries that expands the application    of capital punishment and other penalties, permits indefensible discrimination,    undermines due legal process and the right to a public and just trial, allows    extradition without guaranteeing rights, and imposes restrictions on freedom    of assembly and freedom of expression.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Against the risk of state terrorism and the confrontation    of terror with the instruments of terror itself, there is only one way forward    – the constructive path of consolidating the boundaries of an international    "state of law". An international state of law will only prevail under the primacy    of legality, with an "empire of law" that has the power of the word and the    legitimacy of the consensus.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">In this context, marked by the end of defined    bipolarities (since the end of the Cold War), by the uncertain fate of international    organizations and by the power of a single global superpower, the equilibrium    of the international order will require the revival of multilateralism and the    strengthening of international civil society based on cosmopolitan solidarity.    These are the only forces capable of detaining the high level of discretionary    power within the empire, and of civilizing this reckless "state of nature",    so as to allow the empire of law to tame its destructive and irrational tendencies.    </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Faced with these challenges, we shall end by    affirming our belief in the implementation of human rights as the rationality    of resistance and the only liberating platform in our time. Today, more than    ever, there is a clear need to invent a new order that is more democratic and    egalitarian, capable of celebrating the interdependence between democracy, development    and human rights, and which, above all, is centered on the value of the absolute    prevalence of human dignity.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Notes</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">This text is based on the lecture "Social, Economic    and Cultural Rights and Civil and Political Rights" presented at the 3rd International    Conference on Human Rights, whose central theme was "The State of Law and the    Construction of Peace", held in São Paulo on May 27, 2003.</font></p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="3"><b>NOTES</b></font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end01"></a><a href="#sup01">1</a>.    </b>On the same subject see also: Celso Lafer, 1988, p. 134. Likewise, Ignacy    Sachs (1998a, p. 156) claims that "it can never be too strongly emphasized that    the emergence of rights is the outcome of struggle, that rights are conquered,    sometimes on the barricades, within a historical process full of vicissitudes,    by means of which, needs and aspirations are articulated as demands and banners    of struggle, before they are recognized as rights". According to Allan Rosas    (1995, p. 243), "The concept of human rights is always a progressive one. ...    The debate on what are human rights and how they should be defined is part and    parcel of our history, past and present". </font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end02"></a><a href="#sup02">2</a>.    </b>The same author adds (p. 441): "Basic individual rights are not the exclusive    domain of the state, but constitute a legitimate concern of the international    community".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end03"></a><a href="#sup03">3</a>.    </b>For Celso Lafer (1999, p. 145), from an <i>ex parte principe</i> view founded    on the rights of subjects in relation to the state, there has been a shift to    an <i>ex parte populi</i> view, based on promoting the notion of the rights    of citizens. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end04"></a><a href="#sup04">4</a>.    </b>The authors add: "There is a variety of new subjects that international    law has absorbed under the conditions mentioned above: political, economic,    social, cultural, scientific, technical, etc. This book nevertheless shows that    three of them deserve highlighting: the protection and guaranteeing of the Rights    of Man, development and economic and political integration". In the view of    Hector Fix-Zamudio (p. 184) "... the establishment of international organizations    to protect human rights that the noted Italian treaty writer, Mauro Cappelleti    has termed, ‘transnational constitutional jurisdiction’, has, as a judicial    check on the constitutionality of legislative clauses and on concrete acts of    authority, influenced Internal Law, particularly in the sphere of human rights,    and has projected itself into an international and also community context".    </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end05"></a><a href="#sup05">5</a>.    </b>It may be noted that the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial    Discrimination, the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against    Women and the Convention on the Rights of the Child consider not only civil    and political rights, but also social, economic and cultural rights, endorsing    the idea of the indivisibility of human rights. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end06"></a><a href="#sup06">6</a>.    </b>See "Deepening Democracy in a Fragmented World". In: <i>Human Development    Report, </i>UNDP, 2002.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end07"></a><a href="#sup07">7</a>.    </b>The author adds: "Development is about transforming societies, improving    the lives of the poor, enabling everyone to have a chance at success and access    to health care and education" (p. 252). </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end08"></a><a href="#sup08">8</a>.    </b>According to data from the "Vital Signs" report by the Worldwatch Institute    (2003), income inequalities are reflected in health indicators: infant mortality    in poor countries is 13 times that of rich countries; maternal mortality is    150 times higher in LDCs than in industrialized countries. Lack of clean water    and basic sanitation kills 1.7 million individuals per year (of which 90% are    children), while 1.6 million individuals die from diseases arising from the    use of fossil fuels for heating and the preparation of food. The report also    highlights the fact that almost all armed conflicts are concentrated in the    developing world, which has produced 80% of all refugees over the last decade.    </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end09"></a><a href="#sup09">9</a>.    </b>In conceiving development as freedom, Amartya Sen (pp. 35-36; 297) maintains    that: "In this sense, the expansion of liberties is seen both as 1) an end in    itself and 2) the main meaning of development. Such ends may be respectively    termed the constitutive and the instrumental function of liberty with regard    to development. The constitutive function of liberty is related to the importance    of substantive liberty for the elevation of human life. Substantive liberties    include elementary capacities such as avoiding privation due to hunger, malnutrition,    avoidable mortality, premature death and liberties associated with education,    political participation, prohibition of censorship, etc. From this constitutive    perspective, development involves the expansion of human liberties". On the    right to development see also Karel Vasak. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end10"></a><a href="#sup10">10</a>.    </b>With regard to international civil society, it should be noted that of the    738 NGOs registered at the 1999 Seattle conference, 87% were from industrialized    countries. This statistic reveals the asymmetries that still exist with regard    to the composition of international civil society itself on the issue of North-South    relations. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end11"></a><a href="#sup11">11</a>.    </b>Many states are still presenting heavy resistance to accepting facultative    clauses that refer to individual petitions and communications between states.    According to 2001 data, it is sufficient to highlight the fact that: (a) of    the 147 states that signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political    Rights, only 97 accepted the mechanism of individual petitions (having ratified    the Facultative Protocol to this end); (b) of the 124 states that signed the    Convention against Torture, only 43 states accepted the mechanism of communications    between states and individual petitions (in the terms of articles 21 and 22    of the Convention); (c) of the 157 states that signed the Convention on the    Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination, only 34 states accepted the    mechanism of individual petitions (in the terms of article 14 of the Convention);    and finally; (d) of the 168 states signing the Convention on Eliminating all    forms of Discrimination against Women, only 21 states accepted the mechanism    of individual petitions, having ratified the Facultative Protocol to the Convention    on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination against Women, only 21 accepted    the mechanism of individual petitioning, and ratified the Facultative Protocol    to this end.</font></p>      ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end12"></a><a href="#sup12">12</a>.    </b>Mary Robinson adds: "By way of example, an economist has already warned    that trade and exchange rate policy can have a greater impact on the development    of children’s rights than the reach of the budget dedicated to health and education.    An incompetent central bank director can do more harm to children’s rights than    an incompetent minister of education". </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end13"></a><a href="#sup13">13</a>.    </b>Jeffrey Sachs notes (pp. 1329-30): "Some 700 million individuals – the poorest    – are in debt to the rich countries. The so-called ‘highly indebted poor countries’    form a group of 42 financially bankrupt and largely disorganized economies.    These owe more than US$ 100 billion in unpaid debts to the World Bank, the International    Monetary Fund, other development banks and governments …. Many of these loans    were made to tyrannical regimes to respond to the propositions of the Cold War.    Many reflect erroneous ideas of the past. ... Jubilee 2000, an organization    supported by individuals as varied as Pope John Paul II, Jesse Jackson and the    rock singer Bono, have called for the elimination of the foreign debt of the    world’s poorest countries. The idea is frequently viewed as unrealistic, but    it is the realists who fail to understand the economic opportunities of today’s    world. ... In 1996, the IMF and the World Bank announced a program of major    impact, albeit without establishing a genuine dialog with the affected countries.    Three years later, these plans failed. Only two countries, Bolivia and Uganda,    received US$ 200 million, while 40 countries are still waiting in line. Over    the same period, the stock markets of the rich countries grew by over US$ 5    trillion, more than 50 times the debt of the 42 poor countries. It is thus a    cruel game that the richest countries play in protesting that they have no way    of canceling the debts".</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end14"></a><a href="#sup14">14</a>.    </b>On this subject, see Joseph E. Stiglitz. According to the author: "When    crises hit, the IMF prescribed outmoded, inappropriate, if standard solutions,    without considering the effects they would have on the people in the countries    told to follow these policies. Rarely did I see forecasts about what the policies    would do to poverty. Rarely did I see thoughtful discussions and analyses of    the consequences of alternative policies. There was a single prescription. Alternative    opinions were not sought. Open, frank discussion was discouraged – there is    no room for it. Ideology guided policy prescription and countries were expected    to follow the IMF guidelines without debate. These attitudes made me cringe.    It was not that they often produced poor results; they were antidemocratic"    (p. xiv). </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end15"></a><a href="#sup15">15</a>.    </b>The author adds: "Where income is distributed equally and opportunities    are reasonably similar, individuals are in a stronger position to negotiate    their interests and there is less need for public expenditure by the state.    Where, on the other hand, income is inequitably distributed, the demand for    equal opportunities and the equal exercise of economic, social and cultural    rights requires greater public expenditure, based on progressive taxation and    other measures. Paradoxically, however, taxation for public expenditure appears    to be more welcome in egalitarian societies than in societies where wealth is    unequally distributed" (p. 40). </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end16"></a><a href="#sup16">16</a>.    </b>Jack Donnelly (2001, p. 153): "The relief of poverty and the adoption of    compensatory policies are functions of the state and not of the market. These    are demands related to justice, rights and obligations, and not to efficiency.    ... Markets are simply unable to deal with them – because they have no vocation    for this". </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end17"></a><a href="#sup17">17</a>.    </b>It should be highlighted that both social, civic and political rights require    both negative and positive services by the state, the view being simplistic    and erroneous that social rights merely require positive services, while civic    and political rights require negative ones, or merely the inactivity of the    state. By way of example, we should enquire as to the cost of the security apparatus    through which classical civil rights are guaranteed, such as the right to liberty    and the right to property, or the cost of the electoral apparatus that makes    political rights possible, or the justice apparatus that guarantees the right    of access to the Judiciary. That is, civil and political rights are not restricted    to demanding the mere inactivity of the state, since their implementation requires    guided public sector policies that also entail a cost. </font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end18"></a><a href="#sup18">18</a>.    </b>The expression "progressive application" has frequently been wrongly interpreted.    In its "General Comment n. 3" (1990), on the nature of the state’s obligations    relating to Article 2, Paragraph 1, the Commission on Economic, Social and Cultural    Rights (UN Doc. E/1991/23) affirmed that if the expression "progressive realization"    constitutes a recognition of the fact that the full realization of social, economic    and cultural rights cannot be achieved in a short period of time, this expression    should be interpreted in the light of its central objective, which is to establish    clear obligations for participating states, in the sense of adopting measures    as rapidly as possible in order to realize these rights.</font></p>      <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="end19"></a><a href="#sup19">19</a>.    </b>"For Whom the Liberty Bell Tolls", <i>The Economist</i>, August 31, 2002,    pp. 18-20.</font></p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      <p>&nbsp;</p>      ]]></body>
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</article>
